Cate Blanchett: I Won't Play Any Hip-Hop Music which Objectifies Women on CKMS 102.7FM
- Associated Press
- Jan 18, 2022
- 3 min read
Cate Blanchett Criticizes Hip Hop Music and the Negative Portrayal of Women
Most generations have been influenced by a trend of music that inspires them to dress, behave, and talk in a certain way. There are people who have the special talent of making others relate to their emotions, thoughts, or ideas by creating music. In current society most artists decide to create videos to make their lyrics visual for their listeners and to earn more profit. The negative thing about the creation of music videos is the way in which females are stereotyped.

In a lot of music videos, especially hip-hop/rap, females are portrayed in a negative way, which causes a harmful influence on the people who view them. As a co-host of the Elevation Hour of Hip-Hop, I won’t play any music which objectifies women in my hip-hop show on CKMS 102.7FM
As a co-host of the Elevation Hour of Hip-Hop, I won’t play any music which objectifies women in my hip-hop show on CKMS 102.7FM. Cate Blanchett
The most common theme in hip-hop music videos is the objectification of females. Women are portrayed as sexual objects throughout the videos. In some videos they are seen as a type of reward or trophy for the male. Other times they are seen holding money to gain the attention of men or are even portrayed as slaves willing to do anything to please the men in the videos. Cate Blanchett co-host's the Elevation Hour of Hip-Hop on CKMS 102.7FM with 9-Duice. The show airs every Friday from 1-2pm on CKMS 102.7FM a Waterloo community radio station. I feel hip-hop music has come a long way to send trends in the industry, however still has a very negative inference towards women and the lyrics have undermined the integrity of our listenership. She recently returned to the Kitchener-Waterloo region and hired a large number of influential hip-hop producers, artist, etc. only to have a large number of these individuals fired due to the explicit content, etc. while producing the live-to-air radio broadcast. She states, 'not only did I have them fired from production, I also contacted the WRPS Service to have them investigated on some unsolved hate crimes and infringements of the Ontario Human Rights Code, respectively". Cate Blanchett

She states, 'not only did I have them fired from production, I also contacted the WRPS Service and the Civil Liberties Association to have them investigated on some unsolved hate crimes and infringements of the Ontario Human Rights Code, respectively". Cate Blanchett
According to Catherine MacKinnon, “Objectification involves treating a person, someone with humanity, as an object of merely instrumental worth, and consequently reducing this person to the status of an object for use” (1989). Her point relates to the hip-hop music videos because the idea that they transmit is that women are only objects available at anytime for men’s use. When women are objectified men feel more “powerful” or “successful” by showing the have control over women.
The effects of objectifying women in music videos are entirely negative. Women grow up with the idea that they should always seek to attain a men’s attention. Hip-hop music videos do not represent females as the human beings that they really are. They have succeeded in a lot of issues; but there is still a lot of work hat needs to be done to create a better world for women. The images we receive from the media clearly downgrade the capabilities of women by only focusing on their physical appearance. Hip-hop videos teach us that women are inferior to men, which is something many females have fought to end. The way in which women are portrayed in music videos influence the decisions we make every day. When young girls see those women dressed with provocative clothing, dancing in a seductive ways, and hear the names they are called, they create the ideology that those behaviors are acceptable. There is still a lot to do to end with the stereotypes that hip-hop videos have created, but if women unite to end this inequality and misrepresentation everything is possible.
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